Stan Getz was not just the man whose sax could conjure up the lapping of waves on a Rio beach (his contribution to the 1960s jazz-samba craze), and this live set from in Zurich in 1960 catches him swinging hard as well as tenderly stroking the ballads that made crowds swoon, adding the frisson of unfamiliar but very high-class partners. The volatile Getz had fired most of his European band at the start of this tour and borrowed Oscar Peterson's sidemen – bass star Ray Brown and drummer Ed Thigpen – to complement his brilliant Swedish pianist, Jan Johansson. Gone With the Wind segues gracefully from Getz's famous long-note quiver to an elegant purr as the pulse picks up. Woody 'n' You finds Johansson as inspired as his boss at thematic development. Brown's decoration of the tenor's lonesome hoots is delicious on Spring Can Really Hang You Up the Most, and Pernod is a barnstormer that Getz and Johansson grab by the scruff of the neck. It's a straightahead set full of inventive soloing and inspired support, particularly from Brown.